PETROLOGIC EVOLUTION OF ANORTHOCLASE PHONOLITE LAVAS AT MOUNT
EREBUS, ROSS ISLAND, ANTARCTICA
KYLE PR, MOORE JA, THIRLWALL MF
JOURNAL OF PETROLOGY
v. 33(#4) pp. 849-875 1992
- Institutions:
- NEW MEXICO INST MIN & TECHNOL,DEPT GEOSCI/SOCORRO//NM/87801
- UNIV LONDON ROYAL HOLLOWAY & BEDFORD NEW COLL,DEPT GEOL/EGHAM TW20 0EX//ENGLAND
- Abstract:
- Mount Erebus, Ross Island, Antarctica, is an active, intraplate, alkaline
volcano. The strongly undersaturated sodic lavas range from basanite to
anorthoclase phonolite, and are termed the Erebus lineage (EL). The lavas are
porphyritic with olivine (Fo88-51), clinopyroxene (Wo45-53En36-41Fs8-30),
opaque oxides (Usp51-76), feldspar (An72-11), and apatite. Rare earth element
(REE) contents increase only slightly with increasing differentiation compared
with other incompatible elements. The light REE are enriched (La(N)/Yb(N) =
14-20) and there are no significant Eu anomalies. Sr-87/Sr-86 is uniform and
low (approximately 0.7030) throughout the EL, suggesting derivation of the
basanites from a depleted asthenospheric mantle source, and lack of
significant crustal contamination during fractionation of the basanite.
Regular geochemical trends indicate that the EL evolved from the basanites by
fractional crystallization. Major element mass balance calculations and trace
element models show that fractionation of 16% olivine, 52% clinopyroxene, 14%
Fe-Ti oxides, 11% feldspar, 3% nepheline, and 3% apatite from a basanite
parent leaves 23.5% anorthoclase phonolite. Minor volumes of less
undersaturated, more iron-rich benmoreite, phonolite, and trachyte are termed
the enriched iron series (EFS). The trachytes have Sr-87/Sr-86 of 0.704,
higher than other EFS and EL rocks. and they probably evolved by a combined
assimilation-fractional crystallization process. The large volume of phonolite
at Mt. Erebus requires significant basanite production. This occurs by low
degrees of partial melting in a mantle plume (here termed the Erebus plume)
rising at a rate of about 6 cm/yr.
- Keywords:
- MCMURDO VOLCANIC GROUP; TRACE-ELEMENTS; GEOCHEMISTRY; ORIGIN;
MINERALOGY; BASALTS; OLIVINE; ROCKS